There have been two successful hen harrier nests at Langholm this year, according to the Langholm Demonstration Project website (here). The scant information provided informs us that the nests contained healthy broods of six and four chicks.
Interestingly, the Project website doesn’t provide any information about the number of satellite tags that have been fitted to chicks this year. We find that very curious, given that two female chicks from the brood of six were fitted with tags prior to their fledging the nest last week.
What’s with the secrecy? This is an expensive project, part-funded by the taxpayer, and there’s strong public interest in what happens to these harriers when they leave Langholm. We know from previous years that the survival rate of these young birds is appalling, with many of them ‘mysteriously disappearing’ over grouse moors in Scotland and northern England. Strangely, the Project team has been reluctant to reveal these locations.
We’ll we watching with great interest to see whether the Project team releases information about the movements of these latest two young birds over the coming weeks or whether this turns into yet another cover up job.
Meanwhile, Cat Barlow who runs the related ‘Making the Most of Moorlands’ education website (here) has posted some video footage of the brood of four, as well as some merlins and other species.
To read our previous blog posts about Langholm, just type ‘Langholm’ into the search box on the right hand side of the blog. (Too many previous posts to list them here).
What’s the betting they are both males?!
Now THIS is impressive – it should be the blueprint of how to run a sat-tagging project:
http://www.snh.gov.uk/about-scotlands-nature/species/fish/sea-fish/shark-tagging-project/
Pay particular attention to the post-fieldwork report via the above link – it’s very very good.
Looks like the project is running for a second year: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-highlands-islands-23351039
Cheers for highlighting this wonderful and very well executed project – what a joy to read – open, honest, not long winded and very educational report – a case of money well spent.
Better not let the SGA know that basking sharks are known to slip onto grouse moors in the dead of night and take their fill of the best grouse and upset legally set snares on the way home.